2 of Delta's credit cards offer bonus Medallion Qualification Miles - the key to getting elite status
- When you're a frequent flyer with Delta, you can earn elite "Medallion" status, entitling you to special benefits and perks like first-class upgrades and waived fees.
- To qualify for Medallion status, you need to earn a certain number of Medallion Qualification Miles, or MQMs, and Medallion Qualification Dollars - MQDs - within a calendar year.
- MQMs are the total distance you've flown within the year, and MQDs are the total amount you've spent on base fares within that year.
- To get a boost on MQMs, you can open one of Delta's two premium credit cards and meet minimum spending requirements: the Platinum Delta SkyMiles® Credit Card from American Express, or the Delta Reserve® Credit Card from American Express.
Two of Delta's personal credit cards can earn you bonus Medallion Qualification Miles, or MQMs, when you meet spending requirements in a cardmember year.
If you want to earn Delta Medallion elite status, MQMs are part of the requirements you'll need to meet in order to qualify, so leveraging your credit cards to help get you there can be a great strategy.
The Platinum Delta SkyMiles Amex card offers 50,000 Delta SkyMiles when you spend $3,000 in the first three months. Plus, you can get 50% in the form of a statement credit on purchases made directly with Delta in the first three months, up to $500 back. This offer is only available until August 15.
While the Platinum Delta Amex doesn't currently offer MQMs as part of its welcome bonus, you can earn MQMs for meeting annual spending thresholds on the card - keep reading for more info.
The Delta Reserve Amex card also offers 40,000 Delta SkyMiles and 10,000 MQMs, after you spend $3,000 in the first three months. The card has a high annual fee of $450, but offers a few additional benefits, and like with the Platinum Delta Amex you can earn additional MQMs for meeting annual spending thresholds.
What are MQMs, and how are they different from SkyMiles?
When you join an airline's frequent flyer program, you earn miles virtually every time you fly. Specifically, these miles are redeemable miles - ones that you can redeem for flights, upgrades, or more. Delta calls these "SkyMiles," which is also the name of the frequent flyer program.
Redeemable SkyMiles
Redeemable miles are typically awarded as a function of how much you paid for the base fare on your ticket - on some partner flights, they're awarded as a function of fare class and distance flown. For example, Delta SkyMiles members without elite status earn 5 redeemable miles per dollar spent on a flight's base fare.
MQMs for Delta elite status
When you fly fairly frequently, you can qualify for elite status within the program. Elite status is usually a tiered system, and each tier offers a few additional perks, like bonus mileage earning on flights, upgrades, priority boarding, a dedicated phone support line, and waived fees. Higher tiers come with better benefits, naturally.
In order to qualify for elite status with an airline, you'll typically need to meet certain qualification requirements. Delta, typical of US airlines in 2019, requires you to both fly a certain number of miles or a certain number of flights, and spend a certain amount of money on base fares throughout the previous calendar year to get elite "Medallion" status.
Delta refers to the total number of miles you've flown in a year as Medallion Qualification Miles, or MQMs. You typically earn one MQM for every one mile you fly, although if you fly certain full-fare economy or business class fares, either with Delta or with a partner, you can get 1.5-2x MQMs per mile flown.
(Keep in mind that "miles flown" is calculated as the official routing distance - if you fly a few extra miles to go around a storm, or land on a different runway, you won't earn extra MQMs.)
The total amount you've spent on base fares is referred to as Medallion Qualification Dollars, or MQDs.
While you'd normally need to meet both MQM and MQD requirements to hit the next status level, there are two exceptions.
The first is an exception to MQMs: If you fly a lot, but just very short distances (think a weekly round-trip between New York and Washington, DC), you may be able to qualify by earning enough Medallion Qualifying Segments, or MQSs.
Also, if you spend $25,000 or more on a Delta credit card during the qualification year, the MQD requirement will be waived - except for Diamond Medallion status, which requires spending $250,000 in a calendar year to waive the MQD requirement.
That's why anyone who has or is chasing elite Medallion status with Delta should consider their MQMs when looking at the Delta credit cards. Two of the three main cards - the Platinum and Delta Reserve - offer bonus MQMs when you open a new card. Remember that even if you've had one card before, you can still earn the bonus on the other.
How Delta Amex cards help you earn MQMs
In addition to their welcome bonuses, the Platinum Delta Amex and Delta Reserve Amex offer MQMs for meeting spending thresholds each year.
Platinum Delta Amex
- Earn 10,000 bonus miles and 10,000 MQMs after you spend $25,000 in a calendar year
- Earn another 10,000 bonus miles and 10,000 MQMs after you spend $50,000 in a calendar year
Delta Reserve Amex
- Earn 15,000 bonus miles and 15,000 MQMs after you spend $30,000 in a calendar year
- Earn another 15,000 bonus miles and 15,000 MQMs after you spend $60,000 in a calendar year
One last thing to keep in mind: Each year that you hold Medallion status, you can roll over any MQMs above the requirements for your status level to the next year. So say that you earn 55,000 MQMs in a calendar year, and end up with Gold status, which only requires 50,000 MQMs. You'll roll over those extra 5,000 MQMs for the next qualification year.